A class revisiting Donna Haraway’s iconic manifesto, 40 years later. Apply here by September 12.

Analyze Donna Haraway’s iconic work of feminist technoscience writing. Retool it for 2025. Uncover your own cyborg self. Taught by Kyle of Chimeras Collective.

🗓 5 sessions, 2 hours, weekly from September 23 - October 21

🕰️ Meet-up Day: Tuesdays 6:00-8:00pm

🗺 Location: The wilds of Prospect Park (Nellie’s Lawn), or an indoor location in Park Slope in case of inclement weather.

💰 Pay what you can: Base: $300. Supporter: $500. Scholarship: $100-180. Drop-in for $40-60 per session.

Tuition pays for my time creating a syllabus I think you’ll love, class planning, admin/coordination, snacks, space, and keeping this practice not just sustainable but expanding!

🐌  Max 15 participants

💌 Apply by September 12, 2025

“A cyborg is a cybernetic organism, a hybrid of machine and organism, a creature of social reality as well as a creature of fiction.”

Lynn Hershman Leeson, still from Conceiving Ada (1994)

Lynn Hershman Leeson, still from Conceiving Ada (1994)

In 1985, feminist theorist Donna Haraway penned what would become one of the most prescient essays of the late 20th century: A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century. Writing at the dawn of the personal computer era, Haraway imagined a world where the boundaries between human and machine, nature and culture, mind and body would collapse — and argued this wasn't something to fear, but a radical opportunity to reimagine identity, power, and liberation itself.

Four decades later, we are living in Haraway's cyborg world. We carry computers more powerful than anything she could have imagined, our bodies are monitored by sensors, our relationships mediated by algorithms, and our very sense of self shaped by digital networks. Yet rather than the liberatory potential Haraway envisioned, we often find ourselves trapped by the same old hierarchies — now amplified by surveillance capitalism, algorithmic bias, and platform monopolies.

$$ \text{What can the figure of the cyborg teach us about living well in 2025?} $$

Still from music video for Prada/Rakata by Arca. 3D visuals by Frederik Heyman.

Still from music video for Prada/Rakata by Arca. 3D visuals by Frederik Heyman.

AI therapists. Facial recognition surveillance. Predictive policing. Attention-hacking social media platforms. What are we to do about these technologically-mediated systems of control? Haraway’s cyborg offers a path forward: a noninnocent, unfaithful, trickster being that plays in the ruins of Silicon Valley fantasies.

Ani Liu, installation view of A Search for Ghosts in the Meat Machine (2021)

Ani Liu, installation view of A Search for Ghosts in the Meat Machine (2021)

“The cyborg would not recognize the Garden of Eden; it is not made of mud and cannot dream of returning to dust.”

Together, we will conduct a careful analysis of Haraway's manifesto itself, unpacking its dense weave of feminist theory, technoscience critique, and utopian imagination. We will trace how her cyborg travels through today's technological landscape — from the social media algorithms that shape our desires to the climate technologies that promise to save or doom us.

Through collaborative investigations and embodied experiments, we will explore what it means to live as cyborgs in an age when the boundary between human and machine has not disappeared but proliferated into a thousand new sites of struggle and possibility. This class will equip you with both the theoretical tools and the practical awareness to navigate our contemporary cyborg condition.

Wendi Yan, Dream of Walnut Palaces (2025)

Wendi Yan, Dream of Walnut Palaces (2025)

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